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Springtime splendor: Setting, mystique of Masters add meaning to first major

Four-time Masters champion Tiger Woods (right) and 1998 champ Mark O’Meara examine the 14th green during a practice round. Woods has won eight of his last 10 tournaments and is an even-money favorite to win this Masters. (David J. Phillip/Associated Press)
AUGUSTA, Ga. - Ann Curtis came in the back gates of Augusta National expecting little more than a nice day with her husband. She is not a golfer, never has been here before, but what she saw gave her a start.

“I’m not one that’s easily awed,” she said. “It’s just breathtaking.”

Before her was a cathedral of spring - home to the Masters, yes, but also something more. An annual rite, an emergence from winter into a blaze of color from green grass to pink and fuchsia azaleas to white dogwoods.

It’s a mystique that doesn’t wear off, even for Arnold Palmer and Butch Harmon after more than half a century. Harmon was a toddler when his father, Claude, won the Masters 60 years ago. Palmer, perhaps the most beloved figure at Augusta, won the first of his four green jackets 50 years ago.

“There are so many stories here,” Harmon said.

“That’s what is so great about this place,” Palmer quietly replied.

Today’s stars understand that, too.

“This major is so important to all of us,” Tiger Woods said. “It’s such a special event.”

Woods, a four-time Masters champion, appreciates the beauty of Augusta National, but he’s here for the golf.

The world’s No. 1 player sent expectations soaring when he said earlier this year that the Grand Slam - winning all four majors in the same year - was “easily within reason.” He has won eight out of his last 10 events and is an even-money favorite to win this week, odds never before seen in golf.

He played 18 holes on Sunday and Monday, nine holes Tuesday and spent the final day of practice on the driving range and the putting green, skipping the Par 3 tournament because he wanted no distractions.

For so many others, Augusta National is all about distractions.

The Masters is the only major held on the same golf course every year, and it has been televised every year since 1956. Fans and players alike grow up watching it the second weekend of April. They know the holes. They remember the shots. They can recite the history. But they can’t recreate the beauty.

It is a powerful draw for those who don’t have a ticket. Even in a slumping economy, the market for a Masters badge remains high.

One New York broker said a four-day pass was going for $3,500, and if that sounds like a steal, consider the face value - $175, by far the cheapest for a major sporting event.

Inside the gates, the value only gets better. A pimiento cheese sandwich goes for $1.50, candy bars for $1 and a cup of beer for $2. It’s not gourmet, but no one comes to the Masters for a good meal.

They are here for the views, stunning changes in elevation down to Amen Corner, where Rae’s Creek cuts behind the 11th green, in front of the 12th green and winds along the 13th hole, where the club says there are 1,600 azaleas.

And they are here for the golf. For all the flowers, there are just as many footprints left by history.

Each hole contains a Masters moment, from Austin’s Ben Crenshaw making a 60-foot birdie putt on the 10th hole in 1984 to Sandy Lyle hitting out of the cavernous bunker on the 18th to 10 feet for a birdie to win by a stroke 20 years ago.

The Masters is the youngest of the four majors, created in 1934 by Bobby Jones. Even so, perhaps no other golf tournament celebrates its history quite like the Masters, and Wednesday was a perfect example.

Playing the 18th hole by himself was Larry Mize, who turns 50 later this year. He’s remembered as the local kid who chipped in for birdie on the 11th hole in 1987 to beat Greg Norman in a playoff.

Mize has never even practiced that shot since.

“It’s a pure memory,” he said. “I don’t want to ruin it.”

Two groups back was Jack Nicklaus, who stopped playing the Masters in 2005 but decided to play the back nine for practice with his 18-year-old grandson on the bag, just so the kid could see the course for himself. Nicklaus played with Gary Player, who will set the record this week by taking part in his 51st Masters.

The Golden Bear is now 68, and he had to hit a fairway metal into almost all the par 4s, but he was greeted by a standing ovation as he walked off the 18th tee.

What gives the course its mystique? Nicklaus left that for others to ponder, but his answer was simple:

“It’s obviously a pretty place.”

 

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